[USL PRO: Awards] The Pittsburgh Riverhounds' Jose Angulo, who shared USL PRO's scoring title with Dom
Dwyer with 15 goals, was named the league's Most Valuable Player. For all the 2013 award winners ...

Most Valuable Player – Jose Angulo,
Pittsburgh Riverhounds Angulo had a standout season for the Riverhounds as he led the league with 34 points and finished tied for the league lead with 15 goals. The first player to score
at Pittsburgh’s new Highmark Stadium, Angulo had a role in more than half the Riverhounds’ 36 regular-season goals as he led them to the USL PRO playoffs.

Rookie of the Year - Nate Robinson, Richmond Kickers A trialist at the Kickers’ preseason combine, Robinson quickly became a key figure in the
regular-season champions’ success as he finished his rookie season with four goals and a team-high nine assists. Robinson’s delivery from the flanks and on set pieces provided outstanding
service to Richmond’s front-runners as the Kickers scored 50 goals in a regular season for the first time since 2006.

Defender of the Year -
Colin Falvey, Charleston Battery The Battery’s captain was instrumental in Charleston’s strong performances in USL PRO, with the club conceding just 29 goals in 26 games.
Named the team’s Most Valuable Player, Falvey appeared in every game of the season, missing just 34 minutes of action, while also scoring two goals and adding an assist. He also scored the
game-winning goal in the Battery’s victory over the San Jose Earthquakes in the U.S. Open Cup.

Goalkeeper of the Year - Andrew Dykstra,
Richmond Kickers Dykstra was at the heart of a Kickers defense that conceded the fewest goals in USL PRO throughout the season. The league-leader in goals-against average and shutouts,
Dykstra made 75 saves in 21 appearances on loan from D.C. United as the Kickers ran off a 22-game undefeated streak ten route to the USL PRO regular-season championship.

Coach of the Year - Leigh Cowlishaw, Richmond Kickers In the first season of the club’s partnership with D.C. United, Cowlishaw did a masterful job of
combining a veteran core with a new crop of youngsters that shone throughout the season. The Kickers set a new USL PRO record by going 22 games without defeat, with contributions coming from all over
the field. Richmond scored more than twice the number of goals it conceded, and clinched the club’s sixth regular-season championship with a game to spare.